He of course was a butt licker for arch traitor McCain. I Never was able to find out exactly what 'ol songbird had on him, but it must have been a doozy. or even several doozies.
He suddenly morphed into a faux DJT supporter after songbird got justice. Probably out of fear of getting eventual justice himself, but temporary relief that he was freed from songbird's captivity.
Maybe he has now been presented by DOJ with some revelations that threaten justice for him and are forthcoming. His option to mitigate the ultimate justice requires his cooperation to sing, thus incriminating his present buddies.
Face it, he has pressure from everywhere.
It does appear that now it is most probable that he thinks that if he goes all in with the deep state instead of singing, the whole of the DS can all elude what's coming under banner of the 'masters of the universe' media monopoly.
Nov, 2020 is the OBVIOUS deadline for us all. Either DJT wins or the DS wins.
Of course Lindsay is simply mistaken once more, but it appears that he is going for it.
He fools no one. Once a dirty traitor, always one. enter songbird #2....
:
: https://youtu.be/OM7Fj-0jpik
: By Neil Munro
: Lindsey Graham’s Amnesty-for-Migration-Fix Swap Gets Boost
: from Donald Trump’s Deportation Delay
: President Donald Trump’s decision to delay a small-scale
: deportation operation has created an opening for Sen.
: Lindsey Graham’s push to swap an amnesty for border
: reforms, say pro-immigration reformers.
: Graham already “is negotiating with [Democratic Sen. Richard]
: Durbin — [and] he’s not pulling the Republicans together”
: to present a united front, said Jessica Vaughan, policy
: director at the Center for Immigration Studies.
: On June 19, for example, Graham told Democratic Senators at a
: committee meeting that he is willing to trade an amnesty to
: get a border fixes. “I am willing to deal with DACA
: [Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals] … We will take a
: couple of weeks to see if we can find a compromise,” he
: said.
: Trump announced the enforcement delay on Sunday afternoon,
: amid rising efforts by Democrats to block border reforms or
: even the implementation of judges’ deportation orders.
: “At the request of Democrats, I have delayed the Illegal
: Immigration Removal Process (Deportation) for two weeks to
: see if the Democrats and Republicans can get together and
: work out a solution to the Asylum and Loophole problems at
: the Southern Border,” Trump tweeted Saturday afternoon. “If
: not, Deportations start!”
: The delay was likely forced by top-level leaks of the
: deportation efforts, say reformers. Once the details were
: leaked, officials recognized that Immigration and Customs
: Enforcement (ICE) teams could face difficulties in finding
: the migrants who have been told by judges to go home. Also,
: officials worried that the ICE teams would be blocked by
: groups of pro-migration activists.
: But Trump’s tweet widens the danger that Graham and other
: pro-migration GOP Senators could work with Democrats to
: push through an amnesty-for-partial-reform deal, said
: Vaughan. “Lindsey Graham has convinced the president that
: he needs a couple of weeks to pull together a deal on the
: asylum reforms with amnesty as the trade-off … [although]
: it is not clear if the President has drunk the kool-aid or
: has decided to give Lindsey Graham some working room,” she
: said.
: On June 19, Graham announced he was delayed writing up a
: border reform bill in the hope of getting a deal with the
: pro-migration Democrat Senators, led by Sen. Richard Durbin
: (D-IL), one of the co-authors of the 2013 Gang of Eight
: “Comprehensive Immigration Reform” amnesty.
: But Durbin has little incentive to negotiate a deal that seems
: to be a win for Trump. Instead, Durbin’s primary incentive
: is defeating Trump in 2020 — and he is using the migrant
: rush to blame Trump for the Democrat-caused chaos on the
: border. During a June 19 vote at the Senate appropriations
: committee, Durbin said: We must acknowledge the obvious,
: that the last two and half years under the President Trump
: administration have seen our immigration and border
: security policies in disarray. Despite tough talk and harsh
: penalties, our southern border is much less secuture today
: than when Donald Trump took office. In just the last three
: months, more people have been apprehended at the border
: than in all of fiscal 2017.
: Because of that “disarray,” Durbin added that he does not want
: to give more funds, needed by the border agencies, to
: lessen the disarray. “I’m reluctant to provide any funding
: to this administration to promulgate this chaos,” he said.
: “Democrats want to ensure that this crisis lingers for
: political reasons — more voters for them down the line and
: something Trump’s base could view as a total failure in
: 2020,” said RJ Hauman, government relations director at the
: Federation for American Immigration Reform. “Democrats want
: to keep the asylum loopholes driving the crisis, they want
: to continue catch-and-release,” he told Breitbart.
: Simultaneously, Durbin and other Democratic Senators are
: trying to revive the discredited 2013 “Comprehensive
: Immigration Reform” amnesty-and-cheap-labor bill which Sen.
: Graham also helped to draft and pass through the Senate.
: On June 11, for example, Democratic Sen. Amy Klobuchar touted
: the elite-boosting 2013 bill to Kevin McAleenan, the acting
: secretary for the Department of Homeland Security, saying:
: Do you think that comprehensive immigration reform that we
: passed in 2013 in the Senate that was supported by
: President [Barack] Obama and blocked by the Republican
: leadership in the House, do you think that would have
: helped to prevent from happening with all the funding that
: was there for the border and also having a much more
: orderly process for legal immigration?
: In any deal with Graham, Vaughan said, the Democrats will push
: to minimize any changes to the asylum laws which allow a
: huge number of migrants to overwhelm the nation’s courts
: with weak claims for asylum. Democrats will also push for
: passage of their latest “Dream and Promise Act of 2019,”
: which would give greencards to at least 4 million migrants
: without even curbing subsequent chain-migration of their
: relatives. The Dream and Promise act is open-ended because
: it would give a greencard to anyone who could claim they
: got into the United States before age 18 and would make it
: almost impossible for officials to reject false claims, she
: said.
: Graham has sketched his side of the deal, and told Senators on
: June 19: If we don’t change our asylum law and Flores
: [catch and release] decision — thus never stops. The word
: is out in Central American, particularly that if you can
: bring a small child to America, you are going to stay …
: I am willing to invest in Central America. I am willing to
: spend $4.3 billion to make the border a more humane
: situation. I am willing to deal with DACA [amnesty for
: younger illegals] …
: I am not willing to continue the practice that our laws are
: generating, which is to tell everyone in Central America
: that the door is open, come. We’re going to postpone our
: markup that would change this problem by changing our
: asylum laws and [replace Flores to] give 100 days to
: process minor children, not 20.
: Whether we get there or not, I don’t know, but nobody has
: tried harder than Senator Durbin. We’ve met with the White
: House so we’re going to take a couple of weeks to see if we
: can find a compromise to shut down this flow because if we
: don’t … you better get ready to do this again, and again,
: and again, and again.
: This policy of inflating the labor supply boosts economic
: growth for investors because it ensures that employers do
: not have to compete for American workers by offering higher
: wages and better working conditions.
: Flooding the market with cheap, foreign, white-collar
: graduates and blue-collar labor also shifts enormous wealth
: from young employees towards older investors, even as it
: also widens wealth gaps, reduces high-tech investment,
: increases state and local tax burdens, and hurts children’s
: schools and college educations. It also pushes Americans
: away from high-tech careers and sidelines millions of
: marginalized Americans, including many who are now
: struggling with fentanyl addictions. The labor policy also
: moves business investment and wealth from the Heartland to
: the coastal cities, explodes rents and housing costs,
: shrivels real estate values in the Midwest, and rewards
: investors for creating low-tech, labor-intensive
: workplaces.